Saturday, April 2, 2016

Beginner Class and Ice Cream Cones!

I was away last week, as it is Spring Break in our part of the world, and we took a drive down to Winnipeg to visit family and friends. I also spent a day at a beautiful quilt shop in Winkler, MB called Road 17 N and taught a beginner piecing class using ourHighway 10 Designs pattern City Slicker. I had 8 wonderful students and they all got a great start on this quilt top. As I was driving to Winkler I realized I forgot my camera, I was so mad at myself! So I do not have any pictures to share of the class or the students with a finished block to show their fabric choices, I just have the blocks I used as my samples. I’m making a scrappy batik version of this quilt, its a great way to use up leftover 2 1/2” strips from all my batik projects.

Before I left on our trip I had put together a baby quilt from Ice Cream Cone blocks that I won at our guild meeting in February. At our guild meetings we like to teach a quilt block and then ask members to make two out of scraps and bring those blocks back to the guild next month. We then use half the blocks to make a comfort quilt that we donate to a local charity and the other half we have a draw and a lucky member wins the blocks. So I won 21 blocks and then made a scrapy single Irish chain setting blocks to highlight them. Once I had all the setting blocks made I thought they might be too bright and distract from the cones so posted a picture on IG and was reassured that the blocks worked just fine. Whew!

The Ice Cream Cone block was a pattern from Project Linus called Single Scoop and one our guild uses a lot for baby quilts. You can download the paper piecing instructions for ‘Single Scoop’ here, or you can find it in the January/Feb 2006 issue of Quiltmaker magazine. We gave the members the cone fabric so that is why the all match so well. I might still add a border but need to find fabric for that.

6 comments:

The ice cream cones look great with the Irish chain blocks. So very colourful. Shame on you for forgetting your camera when you went to Winkler! I was so looking forward to pictures. Your students probably appreciated not being distracted by picture taking.

Follow on bloglovin

Follow me on Instagram

Tamarack Shack Website

About Me

I have been quilting for over 25 years and have turned my passion for quilting into a home business. Tamarack Shack Longarm Quilting opened it's doors January 2009 on the shores of Schist Lake in Northern Manitoba. I have recently moved to Emo, ON and looking forward to discovering all the beauty of the area and meeting new quilters.
This blog is where I share photos of my quilts as well as my clients quilts. I design quilting patterns with my friend Lori Suss and we call our pattern company Highway 10 Designs. I also enjoy nature photography and try to combine my two passions of quilting and photography in my blog posts.
Please feel free to contact me at tamarackshack1@gmail.com